My guess is you are insecure regarding your own level of competence as a medic.
I absolutely agree. As an IFT unit we don't see much that requires acute care and so I am worried that I'm going to miss something.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
My guess is you are insecure regarding your own level of competence as a medic.
So you dont listen to your EMT no matter their experience, who may or may not be correct in something they see and you have missed?I absolutely agree. As an IFT unit we don't see much that requires acute care and so I am worried that I'm going to miss something.
I have had some great EMTs shed light on an unusual presentation that they had seen before.I absolutely agree. As an IFT unit we don't see much that requires acute care and so I am worried that I'm going to miss something.
So you dont listen to your EMT no matter their experience, who may or may not be correct in something they see and you have missed?
I'd make the 3 year old joke but I think I'm late to the party. I'd also give input but I got lost in what exactly you were trying to say... Mostly what I gathered was you have no trust in EMT-Bs because they are a lower level provider than you. I understand double checking your equipment on a rig, or reassessing what came as a BLS call, to make sure it shouldn't be run ALS, but your distrust sounds like an issue as well as whatever it is being directed to you from the EMT-Bs.
And how does an EMT-B not have a medical director and operate under your license? As far as I'm aware it doesn't work that way, we have protocols and work under medical direction as well...
If you could clarify some of your rambling I will gladly give more input, but what you said is confusing.
Maybe try stop being so condescending?
Maybe you have ****ty partners, maybe you don't, I don't know all I'm getting is your side of the story. But if I had a newly minted paramedic come in to my service where I have been working for years as a basic and order me around and give me the attitude you have in your post, I would not be all nice and cheery for you.
There is a difference between bossing and educating. There is a difference between being friends and treating someone with dignity and respect.
Also, where do you work that basics can give benedryl without medical direction?
Just reading your post...you sound hostile, and angry and i probably wouldnt want to listen to you either.
You say you saw nearly everything as an EMT which is fine and dandy, but at 3 years of being a medic, I reckon you still have a lot to see, care for and manage as far as patients go, and if for NO other reason than to make your life easier, get a long with your EMT.
Its not that hard, and yes you probably are taking yourself too seriously.
"Theyre just IFT"---and so are you...so??
Take a chill pill
Me and all of my partners have always had an understanding.
1) Truck is the basics responsibility. If the basic thinks there is an issue with it mechanically or otherwise it's not questioned as the basic knows how it should operate normally.
2) Everything in the back is both our responsibility. We work together to make sure it's properly stocked.
3) Patient care is first and if the basic feels the medic missed something the basic can speak up without fear of the medic being a ****.
4) If one of us doesn't know a piece of equipment on our rig we work together and learn.
5) You can discuss freely any issues without fear of reprisals.
6) We are a team and not working against one another.
7) Before any administrative punishment is pursued we talk about our issues and if all else fails then write ups are a last resort.
To be honest you sound like you have an ego problem and feel like you demand respect. Respect is earned not demanded.
@sinthia so the same system that allows a B to administer drugs is now extremely restrictive and they can only work if a paramedic authorizes it? If you don't mind me asking, where is it you work? And how much of this is company policy?
And if everything is done under you, why is there such a thing as BLS under what you're describing? Because even if its not an acute call, my understanding of what you said is an EMT cant even administer O2 in the back without the paramedic present in the back. It sounds like everything should be run ALS and the EMT shouldn't be doing an assessment anyways.
And as for the saying you don't listen to your EMTs that's just how it came across in your first post, I apologize if I misinterpreted that.
So you're writing up your partners for every little thing they mess up on? And you're wondering why theres bad blood?
I work in NC, every county has a different Medical Director (county based and system based)
The county I work does not allow for basic providers. Its a County thing, nothing acute. They can take discharges out of the hospital, or dialysis runs. However basics cannot attend an acute call if it originates in this county and terminates in this county. If it terminates in a different county (BLS long distance Hospital to Hospital transfer) then it falls under our systems medical director where they are allowed to operate at the basic level following State protocols (instead of County) but as an ALS truck we never take long distance BLS calls.
That said, you need to learn how to influence your peers without coming off as condescending or uptight.
What? That means there are basic providers then....
Not within the county we are based out of. But in other counties and with the company yes. There are even counties where I can only do CPR and AED as I am not approved to operate in that county as an ALS provider, and the good Samaritan law only applies to lay people, if you stop to render aid off the clock it is considered practicing medicine without a license.